RAINBOW FARMS AUSTRALIA
14th Century BC
1400 BC
the Iron
Age really began in Anatolia as a new way of
smelting iron on a larger
scale was developed, which would have a great future effect on World
History, and the Celts from now on would begin to evolve into separate
Septs / Family branches under their various Kings and Chieftains while constructing
their duns / hill forts to protect their extensive Family regions.
1318 BC This period was known as the Late Bronze Age, as there was by now a
Bronze
industry with new working and casting techniques, new weapons and tools, and a
wider use for metals than before, as a whole new range of
Bronze
implements and weapons such as socketed axe - heads and swords appeared in
Ireland. The first hill - forts and
ring - forts
were also begun to be constructed, signalling the Hallstatt Celtic Culture, which was
to only first occur in Central Europe in the 7th Century BC.
Crannogs /
artificial islands with palisades on all sides were also being constructed in the
middle of the lochs / lakes in
Ireland. Bronze swords and
Bronze socketed - axes came into use
about the same time as Celtic cohesion was occurring. The earliest
recognized Celtic Culture was to be the Hallstatt in Salzkammergut village in
Austria, with the early Celts in Central Europe living in settlements known as
Oppidia, which were defence villages that were surrounded by a Gallic Wall /
murus Gallicus with the
timbers laid down and filled with stone, and a dry stone outer wall, down to Southern
Germany only.
Before the end of this period, north of the Alps from
Bohemia to the River
Rhine region, true Celtic origins began as interrelated events occurred, and
the Upper Danube changed as regards to material culture and the burial rites in
the bottomlands of the Upper Danube, especially in Austria and Bavaria in the
south - west of Bohemia. These were settled farmers, who were different to the
pastoralists, with a new higher standard of farming, as prior to this they had lived
in rectangular wooden houses in a village or in large homestead groups surrounded
by earthworks or palisades. They became the forerunners of sedentary mixed
farming practices in Europe. Those who died were cremated, and their broken
bones placed in urns for burial in a flat cemetery area that was large, which
became known as Urnfields.
Civilisation spread widely on the bottomland around the Upper Danube surrounding the
Swiss Lakes, in the Upper and Middle Rhine Valleys and then spread further west and
to the
north while expanding slowly. In the north Alpine Urnfield province, that was central to
Southern Germany and Switzerland, the Celts were a mixture of Old and New Cultures,
who became continuous throughout Celtic history.
Raids
were widespread by land and sea around the Eastern Mediterranean and because of
this many
villages were abandoned, and new settlers also appeared in the Upper Danube region, and
there was large scale Copper mining in the Eastern Alps.
From their homeland base in Central Europe the Celts were to spread westwards into France
and the British Isles, into
the south -
west into Iberia, and southwards into Northern Italy, and also eastwards through Central
Europe into the Balkans and Asia Minor.
1200 BC
The
Celts, now began to migrate across the Continent into
Central western and north - western Europe, into Austria, into the Czech Republic,
into France, into Hungary, in to the east of the River Rhine, and also into Slovakia, Southern Germany and
Switzerland, The people north of the Greco - Roman civilization who would become
known as the Keltoi / Celtae and Galatae / Galli, were tall, muscular, fair
skinned, with blue eyes, blonde reddish hair and were warriors who now also began to
spread eastward from eastern Europe.
A new group of People now also arrived into
Ireland
who had better tools and weapons and they lived in wattle and daub
huts, while building stockades and crannogs in the lochs
/ lakes for
self preservation. A living area used by the inhabitants, during this period in time at
Templepatrick in Co. Antrim
in the north - east of the Ulster
Province
covered an area of 300 yards in diameter. (It would be excavated in the 20th Century AD
and Neolithic period
items would be uncovered there, including, flints, axes, pieces from the
Bronze Age along with many
artefacts.
The Celts were to bring
civilization to Europe before
the Greeks and the Romans, as they were the first to construct harvesting
implements, war chariots and invented tools that are still used today, such
as pincers, keys, iron rims for the chariot wheels, and coats of mail, they
shod their horses at first in bronze that had rings round the edges tied up with
thongs, and introduced the Greeks and Romans to soap / Sapo. They produced
outstanding ornaments in Gold, including fibulae and torques, bronze
decorations for the horses'harness, axes, helmets, swords, and pans to produce salt
from sea water, and they were heavily involved in both Poetry and Music.
Return
to Celtic Heritage
On to 1000
BC - 900 BC
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